Retail loss prevention

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A uniformed retail loss prevention employee for Target. Known as a Target Security Specialist

Retail loss prevention (also known as retail asset protection) is a set of practices employed by retail companies to preserve profit.[1] Loss prevention is mainly found within the retail sector but also can be found within other business environments.

Retail loss prevention is geared towards the elimination of preventable loss.[2] Most companies take this traditional approach by either having their own in-house loss prevention team or using external security agencies.

Shrink[edit]

Items that are unaccounted for compared to what the inventory system believes the store should have are losses or "shrink". Shrink is caused by operational errors, internal theft, and external theft. Retail loss prevention is responsible for identifying these causes and following up with training, preventing, investigating, responding to and resolving them. According to the 2018 Federal National Retail Security Survey, the average Shrink % for US Retailers is 1.33%.[3]

Global Shrink Rates[edit]

Average global shrink rates as table by region, ranging from a high of 1.85% in the US to a low of 1.75% in Asian Pacific.[4]

Region Shrinkage, 2018-2018 (%)
USA 1.85
Europe 1.83
Latin America 1.81
Asian Pacific 1.75
Global 1.82

Types of loss[edit]

Operational errors[edit]

Operational errors are inadvertent human errors that occur when workers do not follow existing business best practices and policies or a company lacks the proper best practices and policies to ensure work is performed with minimal human error. Operational errors also occur due to a lack of proper training for workers.

External theft[edit]

External theft is when customers intentionally cause shrink by theft, fraud, or vandalism. Also known as shoplifting, thefts that occur in retail settings are done during business hours and involve the lack of security and prevention measures. Theft prevention can be done by reducing the opportunity to steal in the store through placing prevention mechanisms in place.

Shoplifters and organized retail criminals have become more aggressive and violent: Apprehension might create potential risk for injury to employees and other shoppers and create possible community resistance. Large retailers have policies regarding apprehension of shoplifters: In the USA, about 40% of retailers indicate that no employees are authorized to apprehend shoplifters. CCTV and other identification evidence are turned over to local law enforcement for possible off-site apprehension.[5][6][7]

Internal theft[edit]

Internal theft is when company employees intentionally cause shrink by theft, fraud, vandalism, waste, abuse, or misconduct. Since associates have access to the entire building and during non-business hours, they are capable of costing the company substantial losses over a longer period of time.

Internal theft is typically identified by reporting systems, first-hand visual/CCTV surveillance or tips from coworkers. It frequently occurs via dishonest operation of the Point Of Sale (POS) system.

Internal theft traditionally causes more loss to a business than external theft due to the increased opportunity available to internal staff members. "A well-informed security superintendent of a nationwide chain of retail stores has estimated that it takes between forty and fifty shoplifting incidents to equal the annual loss caused by one dishonest individual inside an organization."[8]

Internal loss[edit]

Internal loss is caused by associates including internal theft. Examples of such losses include staff members stealing products, cashiers not ringing sales through the tills and keeping the payment for themselves, package pilferage, staff selling products at discounted prices as a third-party distributor, "sweethearting" by giving products for free to other parties by staff, colluding with maintenance staff or external contractors to steal products, and under-ringing merchandise on the tills for other parties so they end up paying less for the items.

Internal loss, as with other forms of shrinkage, can be classified as either "malicious" or "non-malicious". Malicious internal loss is shrinkage caused by individuals from within the business such as staff members and cleaning staff and anyone else involved internally in the company. Internal shrink accounted for 35 percent of shrink to businesses in 2011.[9] Non-malicious shrinkage can result from a number of operational failures within the business structure. The processing of returned or damaged stock, for example, can cause articles to be removed from inventory and discarded (which contributes directly to shrinkage) rather than sold at a discount, donated, returned to vendors for credit, or otherwise removed from inventory in a manner that minimizes financial loss.

Loss prevention methods[edit]

Apprehensions and Recoveries[edit]

Many large retailers have in-store loss prevention employees who are trained to reduce shoplifting. This can come in the form of uniformed security officers, undercover security, or both. Each state allows stores to apprehend and detain shoplifters under shopkeeper's privilege laws. Apprehensions are typically a last resort after attempts to recover merchandise fail. An attempt to recover merchandise is known as a recovery or a "burn" and is generally one of the primary job duties of loss prevention associates. Many retailers operate in-store loss prevention teams including Target, Walmart, Macy's, JCPenney, Nordstrom, and Sephora. Teams generally have anywhere from 1-15 individuals depending on location.

Security tags[edit]

The development of electronic article surveillance (a magnetic device attached to the merchandise that would trigger an alarm if removed from the store, also called EAS) led to an increase in arrests; however, many cases have been dismissed due to lack of observation of the crime.[10] A later effort, called "benefit denial" by Read Hayes, was intended to reduce the incentives for people to take the items by destroying the usefulness of items that were improperly removed from stores through the use of measures such as exploding dye packs (ink tags).[1]

Different types of CCTV

CCTV[edit]

CCTV (Closed Circuit Television) is the use of a surveillance system to record any theft or misconduct. It has been widely used all over the world and has affected the decrease in crime globally. It is used to strengthen the central control, responsiveness and crime combating capacity which increases the efficiency and effectiveness[11] of the retail loss prevention methods and strategies.

A receipt scanner gate at an IKEA store in the Netherlands

Receipt checks[edit]

Physical checks[edit]

Many retailers require customers to show their receipt to an employee to confirm that merchandise has been paid for. This can be done by loss prevention officers, as is the case with Target, or by store employees, as is done at Walmart and Costco. Fred Meyer, an Oregon based hypermarket, has begun to contract external security to perform receipt checks.[12][13]

Certain membership stores, including Costco, require customers to comply with receipt checks as terms to their membership.[14]

Receipt scanners[edit]

Some retailers now require customers to scan their printed receipt on an optical scanner before they can exit the store. Customers are held within a barriered area, and an automatic gate is opened by scanning the receipt as proof of purchase, allowing the customer to leave. Some supermarkets in the United Kingdom introduced receipt scanners in 2022-23, following a 22% increase in shoplifting linked to the cost-of-living crisis, but the systems proved unpopular with customers and attracted some negative public reaction.[15][16]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Charles A. Sennewald; John H. Christman (2008). Retail Crime, Security, and Loss Prevention: An Encyclopedic Reference. Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-12-370529-7.
  2. ^ Alan Greggo and Millie Kresevic, Retail Security and Loss Prevention Solutions (2011), Taylor & Francis, pp. 228
  3. ^ National Retail Federation, 2018 National Retail Security Survey, https://nrf.com/system/tdf/Documents/retail%20library/NRF-NRSS-Industry-Research-Survey-2018.pdf?file=1&title=National%20retail%20security%20survey%202018
  4. ^ "The Sensormatic Global Shrink Index" (PDF). Retailers Association of Massachusetts. February 2018.
  5. ^ Johnston, D (2023), 2023 Retail Security Survey, The state of national (USA) retail security and organized retail crime (PDF), National Retail Federation, retrieved 28 October 2023
  6. ^ Miller, H (6 October 2023), "Retail Theft Losses Mount From Shoplifting, Flash Mobs — And Organized Crime", Investors Business Daily, retrieved 28 October 2023
  7. ^ Crime Survey, 2023 Report (PDF), British Retail Consortium, 2023, retrieved 10 November 2023
  8. ^ Lawrence J. Fennelly (1999). Handbook of loss prevention and crime prevention. 3rd ed. Woburn: Butterworth / Heinemann. 55
  9. ^ Centre for Retail Research, 2011. "The Global Retail Theft Barometer 2011", Newark, Centre for Retail Research
  10. ^ Donald J. Horan. The Retailer's Guide to Loss Prevention and Security.
  11. ^ Norris, Clive; McCahill, Mike; Wood, David (2004). "The Growth of CCTV: a global perspective on the international diffusion of video surveillance in publicly accessible space". Surveillance & Society. 2 (2/3). doi:10.24908/ss.v2i2/3.3369. ISSN 1477-7487.
  12. ^ "Portland Fred Meyer stores to start checking receipts, add security to crack down on crime". kgw.com. June 29, 2023. Retrieved 2023-10-05.
  13. ^ KATU Staff (2023-06-29). "Fred Meyer to increase security at Portland stores, announces partnership with city". KATU. Retrieved 2023-10-05.
  14. ^ "Costco Wholesale - Membership Terms & Conditions".
  15. ^ Nazir, Sahar (13 December 2022). "Sainsbury's faces backlash as it makes shoppers scan receipts to exit stores". www.retailgazette.co.uk. Archived from the original on 5 July 2023.
  16. ^ "'It's ridiculous!': Furious Sainsbury's shoppers criticise new barriers 'detaining' customers who fail to show receipt". LBC. Archived from the original on 6 May 2023. Retrieved 24 July 2023.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]